3. The benifits of being white.

4. Yes, he was a mouthy law student

who knew his rights. I wish that I and all Americans knew their rights. We could stop a lot of this police bullying.
As it now stands, a lawyer will instruct you not to say anything until he/she arrives and picks your wallet.
Too bad we are not all informed of our complete legal rights without having to have big money. Our court system should protect these rights if things go to trial. Instead they advise you to seek counsel....I can't afford it and therefore have limited rights.

6. Very scarey.

8. First video was awesome. Guy knew his shit.

Sad that more people don't, regardless of your view on Firearms. If you don't like guns, imagine he had an unopened can of spray paint in his hand. Same scenario. 'Oh you might be a vandal', blah blah.

Second video is fucking infuriating. That should never, ever happen, fuck that cop, he should be fired, and prosecuted

Title 42, U.S.C., Section 14141 makes it unlawful for state or local law enforcement agencies to allow officers to engage in a pattern or practice of conduct that deprives persons of rights protected by the Constitution or U.S. laws. This law, commonly referred to as the Police Misconduct Statute, gives the Department of Justice authority to seek civil remedies in cases where law enforcement agencies have policies or practices that foster a pattern of misconduct by employees. This action is directed against an agency, not against individual officers. The types of issues which may initiate a pattern and practice investigation include:
◾Lack of supervision/monitoring of officers' actions;
◾Lack of justification or reporting by officers on incidents involving the use of force;
◾Lack of, or improper training of, officers; and
◾Citizen complaint processes that treat complainants as adversaries.

9. So, as long as they can't identify you as a felon

and you know your rights, you can walk around intimidating people with impunity.

So, if I were planning to rob a store I could walk around with a gun, and as long as I knew what cases to quote, they couldn't do shit until I actually initiated a crime. That's pretty sensible if you ask me.

Meanwhile, they're allowed to ask you to produce a license when you're driving a car.

11. Just because he is white why the name calling

why all the hostility toward this Young man it the cop that in the wrong it was not illegal for him to carry a gun . He was polite and ask the right questions since when do you want to let police stop you for no reason it makes no difference if he white and the cop doesn't hassle him . If he treats Blacks differently it the cop that in the wrong not the young white guy

13. To the guy in the first video

Yay, you know the law. Now kindly quit being a jackass and stop carrying your penis compensator around everywhere you go.

To the cops in the second video: I might say that I hope you get lynched, tortured and killed, and your bodies hung in Times Square so people can throw feces at them, but that would be against DU rules. So I'll just say that I hope you never again are allowed to masquerade as police officers.

14. jerk

i agree with what some of the guy says in the video, but just cause you took constitutional law 101 doesn't mean you should be an ass and show your knowledge off to the cops. The cops are merely responding to a complaint...any cop in any part of the nation would of done the same regardless of what is said in constitutional law

15. I taught my own son

to behave toward the police exactly like the law student did, and I'm not apologetic about it. It works. Unlike the law student I taught him never to provoke the police or to seek confrontations with them. That works too. Bloomberg has implemented a police state policy in New York city that is so unconstitutional it's appalling, but he's a billionaire and thus can do pretty much whatever he wants in America. That's the root of the problem.

16. Ya' know...I don't watch much TV. You could probably count on one hand the shows I watch regularly,

but I do enjoy "Blue Bloods" on Friday nights.

For me it's the Reagan family dynamics, but every time I watch it I have that niggling feeling of discomfort because of the romanticized and unrealistic portrayal of the NYPD as an organization of such integrity.

The Police Commissioner and family patriarch, played by Tom Selleck, is always having to reach into the depths of his soul to find some fair and just solution to a problem. The show's writers should really try to portray the NYPD in all its thuggishness. It's the least we can expect.